Corring T
Reprod Nutr Dev (1980). 1980;20(4B):1217-35. doi: 10.1051/rnd:19800713.
Digestive enzymes adapt to the diet when substrate intake is altered. An analysis of experimental works shows that this process includes many enzymes. The intestinal step of digestion is the most important in the enzyme breakdown of dietary components. In the first part of this paper, I have pooled the data on the adaptive potency of pancreatic and intestinal enzymes. When protein, carbohydrate and lipid digestions are considered successively, it is clear that the enzymes involved adapt to any change in substrate intake. For instance, when the amount of starch intake increases, the specific activity of pancreatic amylase is stimulated. At the same time, augmenting the disaccharide level leads to an increase in specific disaccharidase activity, and the absorption rate of some simple hydrolytic products, such as fructose, increases. It thus appears that altering the amount of starch intake leads to a parallel change in the activity of all the enzymes involved in the sequential hydrolysis of the dietary carbohydrates. The second part of the paper discusses the physiological significance of this adaptation in terms of utility to the animal. Two situations are considered in which (i) the nutritional requirements are supplied by food or (ii) they are not supplied either because of a dietary or an enzyme deficiency. When the nutritional requirements, particularly that of protein, are met, adaptation is apparently not useful to the animal. Nevertheless, the role of this adaptation on the hydrolysis rate of different substrates can be supposed. When nutritional requirements are not met, some data show that enzyme adaptation may be advantageous to the animal. If dietary restriction is not too severe and thus the biosynthesis of all the enzymes markedly decreases, then digestive secretions would export considerable nitrogenous material into the gastrointestinal lumen; this material could be a substrate compensating for the essential components lacking in the diet. Any enzyme deficiency leading to substrate decrease is similar to a dietary deficiency. Many experimental studies have shown that in pancreatic deficiency the adaptive potency of the organism is responsible for establishing digestive compensation.
当底物摄入量改变时,消化酶会适应饮食。对实验研究的分析表明,这一过程涉及多种酶。消化的肠道阶段在膳食成分的酶促分解中最为重要。在本文的第一部分,我汇总了关于胰腺和肠道酶适应能力的数据。当依次考虑蛋白质、碳水化合物和脂质消化时,很明显所涉及的酶会适应底物摄入量的任何变化。例如,当淀粉摄入量增加时,胰腺淀粉酶的比活性会受到刺激。同时,双糖水平的增加会导致特定双糖酶活性增加,并且一些简单水解产物(如果糖)的吸收率也会增加。因此,改变淀粉摄入量似乎会导致参与膳食碳水化合物顺序水解的所有酶的活性发生平行变化。本文的第二部分从对动物的实用性角度讨论了这种适应的生理意义。考虑了两种情况:(i)营养需求由食物提供,或(ii)由于饮食或酶缺乏而未得到满足。当营养需求,特别是蛋白质需求得到满足时,适应显然对动物没有用处。然而,可以推测这种适应对不同底物水解速率的作用。当营养需求未得到满足时,一些数据表明酶适应可能对动物有利。如果饮食限制不太严重,因此所有酶的生物合成明显减少,那么消化分泌物会将大量含氮物质输出到胃肠道腔中;这种物质可能是一种底物,可补偿饮食中缺乏的必需成分。任何导致底物减少的酶缺乏都类似于饮食缺乏。许多实验研究表明,在胰腺缺乏时,机体的适应能力负责建立消化补偿。